An amateur British archaeologist says he has located Ithaca, the homeland of Homer's legendary hero Odysseus.

Robert Bittlestone - backed by two experts - claims the rocky island depicted in The Odyssey is part of Greek tourist destination Cephalonia.

He used satellite imagery to match the area's landscape with descriptions in the poem about the return of the man behind the wooden horse of Troy.

Many experts had stated Homer was referring to the island of Ithaki.

They had explained geographical inconsistencies in The Odyssey by suggesting that Homer lived much later than the events portrayed and in a different part of the country.

Previous studies have also named other Ionian islands including Cephalonia.

Earthquakes

Surrey-based management consultant Mr Bittlestone first came up with his theory in 1998.

During field trips to western Greece, he also analysed literary, geological and archaeological data, and utilised 3D global visualisation techniques developed by Nasa.

There is something both very new and very old to be found at this new location and that we should now treat the existence of ancient Ithaca very seriously

Robert Bittlestone

His new book, Odysseus Unbound - The Search for Homer's Ithaca, is co-written by Cambridge University classics professor James Diggle, and geologist John Underhill from Edinburgh University.

It suggests earthquakes have helped fill a narrow channel that had separated Cephalonia from Ithaca - said to have been located in the peninsula now known as Paliki.

Future research

It is not clear whether Odysseus or Ithaca really existed.

But Mr Bittlestone said: "Our purpose has been to demonstrate that there is something both very new and very old to be found at this new location and that we should now treat the existence of ancient Ithaca very seriously."

He has described his find as one of the most important classical discoveries since the unearthing of Troy in Turkey in the 1870s.

The book says Ithaca was the peninsula now known as Paliki

The book details 26 locations in The Odyssey that can be identified today in northern Paliki and its vicinity.

The research was conducted in cooperation with the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and with the Athens-based Institute of Geology and Mineral Exploration.

"The book opens exciting prospects for future research regarding the location of Homeric Ithaca," said Petros Tatoulis, Greece's deputy minister of culture.